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TOBACCO
SMOKING- Why Would They Start?
Surroundings
Peer Pressure
Stress Reliever
Family Members
Fit In / Look Older
To be Tough/Cool
Media
Curiosity
Rebellion
Depression
Experiment
SMOKING- Ways to say NO!
Walk Away
Make a Joke
Tell them the Facts
Change the Subject
Be Direct / Assertive
Sports
Money
I’m Allergic
Cold Shoulder
Don’t want Cancer
What would you say?
SMOKING- Ways to STOP!!
Set a Date
List Reasons
Avoid other Smokers
Throw away Reminders
Don’t Quit Quitting
Ask for Help
Accupuncture
Suck on Candy
Change Routine
SMOKING- Products to Help
Patch
Inhaler
Counterhttp://www.quitsmokingcounter.com/
Tarblock (cigarette filters)
ZeroNicotine (pills)
Nicorette Gum
SMOKING- During Pregnancy
Toxins = Lack of Oxygen & Nutrients
- Early Delivery - Middle Ear Infections
- Withdraw Symp. - Low Birth Weight (2x)
- Cerebral Palsy - Sudden Infant
- Cleft Lip / Palate Death Syndrome
- Physical Deformities
SMOKING- Effects on the Budget
Higher Insurance
Doctor Appointments
Dentist Cost (cleaning, care)
Lower Resale Value (car, house, etc.)
SMOKING- Effects on the Budget
Cost:
- pack $6.50 - 5 years $10,920.00
- week $45.50 - 10 years $21,840.00
- month $182.00 - 20 years $43,680.00
- YEAR $2,184.00 - 40 years $87,360.00
What would you buy?
SMOKING- What’s Inside a Cigarette
* Over 4,000 different chemicals * 43 known to cause Cancer! (carcinogens) Acetone – nail polish remover Ammonia – household cleaners Arsenic- poison used to kill rats Butane- flammable substance in gasoline Cadmium – batteries / oil paint
SMOKING- What’s Inside a Cigarette
Carbon Monoxide – gas; starves oxygen Cyanide – deadly poison Formaldehyde – embalming fluid Lead – heavy metal Nicotine – highly addictive Polonium 210 – radioactive material Tar – accumulates in the lungs
Foods must list ingredients on their package, cigarettes do not
Toxins
SMOKING- Effects Inside your Mouth
Bad Breath!
Damage to Taste Buds / Hairy Tongue
Gum Disease, Rotting Teeth, Stained Teeth
Gingivitis Tooth Decay Hairy Tongue
SMOKING- Effects Inside your Mouth
Leukoplakia - Disease of the mouth (gums, cheeks, tongue)
- Starts as flat gray-white sores
- Patches become thick, rough, & hard
SMOKING- Respiratory System
Kills Cilia Cough / Sore Throat Irritation Trachea / Larynx
Bronchitis(acute or chronic inflammation of the membrane lining of the bronchial tubes)
Lung Cancer Emphysema (primarily causes shortness of breath)
SMOKING- Circulatory System
Heart Disease
Less Blood Flow
Raised Blood Pressure
Stickier Blood; Clots Easier
* Slowly kills you – Every cig. 5 - 20 min.*
SMOKING- Outside your body
Bad Breath
Stained Nails & fingers
Blindness
Premature Wrinkles Smelly car, clothes, house
SMOKING- Other Effects
Stroke Fatigue Headaches Sleep Problems Weakened Bones Blood Shot Eyes Reduced Fertility
SMOKING- Smokeless Tobacco *spit, chew, chow, & dip
Perception (not as bad)
Very addictive (more nicotine)
Stick on bottom lip (gums) – suck juices
SMOKING- Smokeless Tobacco
Result: - Ulcers - Receding Gums - Cracking & Bleeding of Gums - Tumors / Oral Cancer
SMOKING- Smokeless Tobacco
Common signs of oral cancer are… - Lump or white patch - Sore that does not heal - Prolonged sore throat - Difficulty in chewing - Restricted movement tongue or jaw
SMOKING- Pics
SMOKING- Secondhand Smoke
Combination of: Mainstream = exhaled by the smoker and Sidestream = burning end of a cigarette
15% of cig. smoke gets inhaled by the smoker 85 percent breathe by innocent bystander
For every 8 smokers who die, 1 bystander dies
SMOKING- Secondhand
Increased Risk - coughing, wheezing & asthma - throat irritation, hoarseness - headache, nausea - burning eyes - buildup of fluid in ear
SMOKING- Effects on Athletics
Increased Phlegm
Lack Mental Focus
Increased Heart Rate (3x)
Prone to Infections / Longer to Heal
Reduce Oxygen / Shortness of Breath
SMOKING- Facts:
Smokers lose 5.5 minutes of life per . cigarette smoked.
Tobacco kills more Americans than AIDS, . drugs, homicides, fires, and auto . accidents combined.
Every 6.5 seconds, a current or former smoker dies
SMOKING
Concept Definition Map = Emphysema
Charts and Graph = Smoking Rate
Reading/Text & Marginalia = Article
NCA Persuasive Paper = Who is to blame for a smokers death, the smoker or the tobacco company.
SMOKING GRAPH
SMOKING- Advertising
15 billion spent on advertising Colorful graphics to catch the eye Give-aways sports / music events Use mascots / characters (Joe Camel) Positioned next to candy to attract teens Portray: attractive, desirable, independence
Common Advertising Techniques
Humor – Funny ads may cause you to associate a product with fun or feeling good.
Slogans and jingles – Catchy phrases or tunes may help you remember the product.
Testimonials – “Satisfied customers” may convince you that the product works
Attractive Models – The use of attractive models communicates the idea that attractive or successful people use the product.
Positive Images – The ad may imply that you need the product to be strong, independent, and successful
Bandwagon Approach – The ad makes you think that everyone uses the product. You may want to “jump on the bandwagon” too.
Appeal to the senses – The use of beautiful or exciting scenery, colors, or music appeals to the senses.
Price appeal – The ad may imply the product is a better bargain than other products.
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